There was quite a
lot of anticipation for the latest film from Quentin Tarantino. With some
already excellent films behind him, Django Unchained was always going to be
successful. However, its released was surrounded by a number of articles
damning Tarantino for his comic use of violence and how he doesn't take serious
issues such as slavery or the Holocaust seriously. I find that the best
solution to this is as follows. If you don’t like the look of a film, don’t go
and watch it. If you think it’s too violent, don’t go and watch it. If you
think you might get offended because the film has slaves or Nazis in it, don’t
go and watch it. It’s simple really.
The plot of
Django Unchained is very enjoyable, and there’s no doubt that it’s an edge of
your seat thriller, if you like Tarantino’s movies. However, there are some
very similar plot lines to in his other movies, such as Kill Bill or Inglorious
Basterds, where there’s a main character who has a grudge to settle and kills a
lot of people in settling that grudge. A man is freed from slavery, joins with
a bounty hunter, kills people, and then tries to free his wife from slavery.
The difference with Django is that it happens in a completely different
setting. Imagine a Western which Tarantino would walk into and stamp his mark
all over. Despite parallels to other films, Django Unchained is a different
film, and it is a very good way to spend a couple of hours.
Having seen Jamie
Foxx in ‘Ray’ and absolutely loving him, I was very interested to see how he
would do in a Tarantino movie. He is very good, and has a very sinister air to
his character. When the audience can almost ‘feel’ the character getting angry,
and is anxiously waiting to see what happens, you can tell that the actor is
doing something right. He delivers some of Tarantino’s one-liners perfectly.
However, I did find the development of his character a little bit unrealistic.
However, I then realised that it was Tarantino, the guy who can have a girl
shot from one direction and have her fly off in a completely different
direction. I found myself (unsurprisingly) rooting for Foxx, and overall liked
the character he played.
I loved Christoph
Waltz in Inglorious Basterds, and in Django Unchained he was every little bit
as wonderful. His character, the bounty hunter, was quick-tongue, witty, sly,
and determined. The scene where Django finally sees his wife again and she
faints in shock is absolutely made by Waltz’s delivery of his punchline. I
thought his character was very interesting too. The scene where he is making
the deal with Candie just shows how principled his character is. I’m not sure
he deserves his Academy Award nomination for Best Supporting Actor though.
Either way I don’t think he’ll win it, and I’m not trying to deny that he was
fantastic in this film. It’s almost worth going to see just for him, which is
saying something.
Leonardo di
Caprio is one of my all-time favourites. Not because I think he’s an amazing
actor, but because I just enjoy his films and his characters. He shows
incredible versatility, and Django Unchained is no exception. As the wealthy
Francophile owner of a vast number of slaves, he is very confident and
arrogant. He hates to be made a fool of and seems to be very different to the
historical view of slave owners, treating many of his slaves as his friends.
However, there are some scenes which are just grim. He doesn’t bat an eyelid at
one man being torn apart by dogs, and is more than happy to let two men fight
to the death to see who is the better fighter. His acting is fantastic, but his
character is better, and once again I found myself enjoying the time he spent
on screen. He’s definitely one of Tarantino’s more interesting characters, and
parallels can be drawn to Hans Landa in the way that he doesn’t show the
typical historical attitude to the people Tarantino poses his character
against.
Can anyone say a
bad word about Samuel L Jackson? He is once again, absolutely incredible in
Django Unchained, and the audience is left a little bit unsure as to what his
role is in Candie’s life. He raised him, and also runs his house, but Candie
seems to respect his opinion over and above many of the white men he employs.
Jackson is as funny as Waltz in this film, and his sheer shock at seeing Django
on a horse (and the following exchange between him and Candie) had me in
stitches. However, his character is much more serious than that, and represents
a major influence in the life of a white man, which at the time would have been
largely unthinkable. I largely agree
with this article (http://www.slate.com/blogs/browbeat/2013/01/08/samuel_l_jackson_in_django_unchained_deserves_an_oscar_as_stephen_quentin.html) which promotes Jackson for the
Supporting Actor nomination over Waltz, purely because he shows off his acting
skills to the fullest in Django.
In terms of other
Tarantino films, Django will never be considered as one of the best. That title
will always, in my eyes, go to Pulp Fiction, with Reservoir Dogs a close
second. I also don’t think it is as good as Inglorious Basterds, but I think it
could give Kill Bill a decent run for its money. Having not yet seen Jackie
Brown, I can’t comment on this, but Django Unchained will definitely be
considered a classic Tarantino movie, and it’s definitely worth a watch. If you
liked his other movies you will like Django, but if you don’t like violence,
comic or otherwise, I’d steer clear.
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